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tv   CNN Presents  CNN  November 22, 2012 11:00am-12:00pm PST

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i'm gary tuchman in atlanta. happy thanksgiving. here's what's happening. the civil war in syria claimed another 76 lives today. reuters reports rebel forces captured a government army base in an oil-producing area near iraq and focus on a hospital in syria's largest city. rebels say it was bombed yesterday. at least 50 vehicles caught in a pile-up on interstate 10 in
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texas. affiliates report dense fog in the area at the time. no fatalities amazingly but the highway was shut down in both directions. a puerto rican doctor says boxer hector camacho is brain dead after being shot in the head two days ago. he boxed for more than 25 years and a former lightweight an junior lightweight champion. i'm gary tuchman at the cnn center in atlanta. next, "cnn presents." tonight on "cnn presents," twisted tale. a pizza deliveryman robs a bank with a bomb around his neck. >> these suckers say, you got 55 minutes, man. what are you going to do? >> and that's just the beginning of one of the most bizarre crimes ever. the twisted tale of the man
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known as the pizza bomber. refund robbery. >> it's like the federal government putting crack cocaine in candy machines. it's that easy. >> this isn't just a drug bust. your tax refund ask at risk. vanished. two florida men last seen with the same sheriff's deputy. >> do you have any hope your son is still alive? >> i don't believe terrance is alive. at this point, i have to find out what happened to him. >> the mystery surrounding two missing men. revealing investigations. fascinating characters. stories with impact. this is "cnn presents" with your host tonight, randi kaye and drew griffin. >> tonight, bizarre crimes of baffling stories of whodunit and a scam targeting your paycheck and mysterious case of two men in florida who simply vanished. >> we begin on a blistering summer day in erie, pennsylvania. by the time the sun had set, one
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of the most bizarre bank robberies in the annals of the fbi had been committed. a man described by his family as the salt of the earth was dead, and a mystery full of strange twists was about to unfold with this phone call to 911. >> 911. what's your emergency? >> yes. we've just been robbed. >> is anyone hurt? >> no. he just walked out the door. >> august 28, 2003. erie, pennsylvania. within minutes of robbing a bank, brian wells is surrounded by police, cross-legged on the ground and handcuffed. told police he was a pizza delivery man, and he delivered a pizza. the group he delivered it to captured him, he told police, put this bomb on his neck and told him to rob a bank. >> call my mom? >> he asks police to call his boss, then to save his life.
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25 minutes tick by. then the device begins to beep. in an instant, the bank robber is dead. the death of brian wells in this parking lot that day turned out to be only the beginning of the most elaborate intricate and some say still unsolved bank robbery case the fbi has ever had. >> at the end of it all, our system worked. our law enforcement partners solved the puzzle, and we achieved convictions and long sentences. >> the fbi, the local police, and the u.s. attorney's office simply want this case to be closed. but is it? tonight, you decide. did the fbi catch all the suspects? did the fbi let one of them walk?
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and did the fbi make a mistake putting blame on a pizza delivery man whose secrets blew up in a parking lot? it was a hot thursday afternoon. jane hyde was expecting to see her brother at a party that night, but she had one errand to run. a quick shopping trip on erie's peach street. but there was trouble. police had blocked the road. cops and cars everywhere. she turned around and went home. it was only later that night, watching the 10:00 news, she learned what that traffic was all about. >> my kids are sitting on the couch and then the story airs of a bank robbery and a man came in to the bank with a bomb on him. >> you are recognizing your brother? >> my brother sitting there with
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this bomb on him. i'm thinking, okay, the police have him. they'll find out who did this to him. then as it goes on, it's like -- brian exploded. you know, the bomb went off. brian's dead. i'm like, i can't believe this. >> after the explosion, one of the first things the cops did was look inside his car, and they found these meticulous notes that amounted to a bizarre scavenger hunt, notes given to brian wells, instructing him to follow a lengthy set of orders if he wanted to survive. >> laying out this puzzling, highly complex scavenger hunt, directing him to go to specific places. >> rich shapiro is a journalist who's written extensively about the robbery for "wired" magazine. >> the notes suggested at the end of this, if he completed it
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in the allotted time, which wasn't much, he would be able to save his life. >> have you asked yourself, why didn't my brother brian get in that car and drive straight to the police station? >> no. i never asked that because brian was in survival mode. i truly believe that he was trying to save his life and others' lives. >> but the police had no idea what to think. was brian wells a victim? was he in on the robbery? what were those notes all about and who wrote them? why? there were no answers, but plenty of agencies wanting to be involved in the biggest case erie had ever seen. >> we have formed a multi-agency task force comprised of the pennsylvania state police, the atf, the erie police department, specifically their bomb squad, the united states attorney's office and the erie county district attorney's office. >> i wouldn't be surprised if some game warden from warren, p.a., was on the task force.
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>> jim fisher, a former fbi agent and criminologist, studied the case from the beginning. >> so you have 50 people running around randomly conducting, you know, leads with very little coordination. no one really seemed to be in charge. >> from the outset, he believes the fbi, the erie police, all the law enforcement agencies involved were on the wrong track. this was not, he says, a bank robbery. you believe brian wells was murdered? >> well, he was murdered. it was a first-degree murder. this was an intentional premeditated homicide. moreover, it was extremely cruel in the way the crime was executed. >> not just the crime, the actual bomb was a crude masterpiece of someone's twisted art. police would find intricate decoy cables, a homemade lock.
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it all made into a bizarre puzzle wrapped around the neck of the victim. and whatever this was, a bank robbery, a violent murder, the case was about to take another bizarre, almost unreal, twist. >> there is a frozen body in a freezer in the garage. >> a second body, this one hidden in a freezer and a new suspect telling an even stranger tale. >> what came first? the body or the freezer? >> the body came in. i put it on a cart. >> just ahead, a man, a body and an ever-expanding cast of suspects. [ male announcer ] alka-seltzer plus presents the cold truth.
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so now's the time. visit medicare.gov or call 1-800-medicare. as brian wells was on the ground in that half hour after he robbed the bank, another man was watching everything unfold from across the street. according to an fbi affidavit, informants said a 63-year-old handyman named william rothstein was sitting in his car, eyes focused on brian wells. bill rothstein, officials later said, was the mastermind behind the entire scheme. >> i put a cut piece of green tarp down here to put his body on.
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>> this is bill rothstein a few months after that bank robbery in a police evidence tape where he's explaining to a detective how he helped a former girlfriend, marjorie diehl-armstrong, dispose of a body. >> what came first, the body or the freezer? >> the body came in. i put it on a cart. i'll show you where the cart is. the cart with the big wheels, not the cart with the small wheels. yes, that one there. >> but what's really going on here? what did that body in the freezer and bill rothstein's confession have to do with the collar bomb explosion that killed brian wells? in a word, everything. bill rothstein told police he was just doing marjorie a favor. he claimed marjorie had killed her abusive ex-boyfriend named jim rhoden. but the fbi's investigation tells another story. rhoden knew about the bank robbery plot and was about to go to police. rothstein made that mess go away.
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>> he came to the house and helped. he took the body out, cleaned everything up, cleaned the walls, replaced floorboards, replaced everything. painted, got rid of everything that might have blood on it. >> after rothstein turned her in to police for the murder of her ex-boyfriend, marjorie stunned investigators with another twist. she connected rothstein to erie's biggest bank robbery. >> i mean, to build the bomb and test the bomb and all the components, he had to have already been building it and designing it. in doing that, he also said, i need some money. so marjorie just gave him like $75,000 worth of money that she also kept at the house, so bill rothstein was left with two of the most important things to hold over marjorie diehl-armstrong. number one, all her money. and, number two, a dead body that would make her lose her liberty the rest of her life. >> even though marjorie diehl-armstrong had been talking with police, it took the fbi
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nearly four more years before it could tie up all the loose ends. everybody, the fbi said, was involved with the robbery. bill rothstein, marjorie diehl-armstrong. even another suspect, a crack dealer named kenneth barnes. and barnes claimed brian wells was in on the plot from the beginning and that he was duped. >> wells was essentially told he would be robbing the bank, but the device that was being put around his neck would be fake so he would not be putting himself in harm's way. as it turns out, he was double-crossed. >> criminologist jim fisher believes it was rothstein who wanted to pull off the perfect diabolical crime that would baffle investigators. the elaborate scavenger hunt would send them to a dead-end. the confusing, yet meticulously crafted collar bomb, even the
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white t-shirt brian wells wore into the bank spray painted with the word "guess." to fisher, all of it hatched in the mind of a madman. >> the kind of motive we can understand, like a standard bank robbery, someone needs the money. then we have a category of crime involving motives that a normal person can't really understand. >> you're describing bill rothstein? >> that would be bill rothstein in my mind. to me, he fits to a tee the profile of someone who would commit such a bizarre and pathological crime. >> but now, four years after the original crime, the government had to prove, in court, its theory was correct. and there were two big problems. rothstein, the alleged mastermind, died before even officially being linked to the
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crime. and the other main suspect, marjorie diehl-armstrong, had told so many lies, she was showing evidence of mental problems and a personality disorder. >> the mental illness was a 30-year history. the personality disorders were a 30-year history. >> over many delays and many more years, the government finally obtained convictions on charges of bank robbery and murder. life plus 30 years for marjorie diehl-armstrong. a lesser sentence for accomplice kenneth barnes because he testified on behalf of prosecutors. brian wells, who died with that bomb around his neck, well, the federal government said he, too, was in on the crime. >> when brian delivered the pizza, he was accosted at gunpoint by a group of strangers whom he did not know. they shot at him. when he tried to run away, they
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knocked him to the ground. >> the fbi version of that, as you know, is different. >> that's a lie. that's a lie. that's all their fabrication. >> the fbi did agree to sit down with cnn to explain their case and their prosecution, how it all went down. they just wanted to know the day we'd arrive here in erie and where the interview would take place. then the fbi began asking us questions. who else would be interviewed for this report? and suddenly, the interview with the fbi was off. jim fisher says the fbi and the u.s. attorney took the easy way out and never really solved the case. >> bill rothstein died about a year after the crime, and he died with, in my opinion, all the secrets, all the answers. and to that extent, well, nobody literally dies laughing.
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he went to his grave knowing that he had outfoxed everyone. >> neither the u.s. attorney's office nor the fbi would comment to cnn about fisher's assertions. and yet, there is someone who is alive, who kenneth barnes says was at rothstein's house the day of the robbery but was never charged in the crime. he is the convicted sex offender granted immunity in exchange for testimony he was never asked to give. next, brian well's family is really wanting to know about you, sir. please. could this man hold the answers that would finally solve the case? consider the silverado 1500 -- still the most dependable, longest-lasting full-size pickups on the road. and now we've also been recognized for lowest total cost of ownership -- based on important things, like depreciation, fuel, and maintenance costs. and now trade up
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in her search for justice, jean heid said she has spent years trying to learn the truth from the one man she believes now holds the key to her brother's innocence. his name is floyd a. stockton, a convicted sex offender who authorities say was living with bill rothstein on the day of the bank robbery. he goes by the nickname, jay. >> jay stockton is a convicted rapist, serial sexual battery of his wife, and he's out there. he's out there, people. >> he is the only one left alive
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and sane enough to tell the truth, she believes. yet the federal government has allowed him to go free. >> they know that my brother is innocent 100%. and they know that bill rothstein, jay stockton are the co-conspirators in this crime that killed brian. >> according to this fbi affidavit, investigators learned of stockton's knowledge to the crime when stockton talked about it in a monitored phone call from jail. stockton was released, then given immunity to testify for the government in the pizza bomb case. stocon'sdwriting to this mpared handwriting on those scavenger notes found in brian well's car. it was a perfect match. >> the authorities believe there are at least two people who wrote the notes and jay stockton is definitely one of them. >> on camera is kenneth eugene
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barnes. >> there is also the testimony of this man, kenneth barnes. >> like i say, i'd never kill anybody. >> barnes pled guilty and is serving a 20-year sentence for his role in the case. but it's this fbi search warrant affidavit now obtained by cnn which raises even more questions about why jay stockton has been allowed to go free. according to the affidavit, barnes and others involved in the case say floyd stockton was deeply involved in the plot. barnes even telling the fbi on the day of the crime, it was stockton who went into the garage, got the collar bomb and handed it to rothstein. when we asked then u.s. attorney for western pennsylvania mary beth buchanan why stockton never testified and was never charged, she initially told us stockton was sick, had suffered several strokes and was unable to travel.
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after our initial phone call, buchanan never talked to us again. and at a news conference in erie, the current u.s. attorney, david hickton, wasn't forthcoming either. what about mr. stockton? what can you tell us about his status and will he ever be prosecuted about this? >> we're not in a position to comment on mr. stockton. >> douglas shugrue, marjorie armstrong's attorney, says there's good reason the fbi wants to keep quiet about jay stockton. >> do you think he is the one person who got away with this? >> yes. he got immunity from the government, free and clear. convicted sex offender. convicted multi-time sex offender. the government felt he was the least involved person and so they gave him immunity. >> they shouldn't have gave him immunity. he didn't deserve immunity. he deserved -- he's the guilty one that killed my brother. he deserved to be brought to justice.
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>> stockton has been featured on the television show, "america's most wanted." private investigators have tried to track him down but stockton has literally vanished, at least that is what he may have thought, until the day we found him. these are pictures of stockton today, two hours north of seattle, down a side street in bellingham, washington, we found stockton where he told our investigator he's been living in this duplex for the past six years but was soon about to leave. a week later, we spotted him leaving the duplex in a pickup truck. we followed to an rv sales lot where he was eyeing a large recreational vehicle. it was perhaps the first time in years anyone had mentioned his involvement in the pizza bomb case. >> how you doing? mr. stockton, right? drew griffin. i'm with cnn. how you doing?
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it's taken a long time for me to find you. i wanted to ask you some questions. no, sir. brian well's family is really wanting to know about you, sir. please. as fast as he could, with his driver's side window lowered, jay stockton sped away not saying a word. mr. stockton, this is drew griffin again with cnn. brian wells' family is really trying to get to the truth of the matter about particularly their brother. you're the only one alive and sane enough to tell the truth. that's what they're after. he has refused all of our phone calls, refused to respond to notes placed at his door. the assistant u.s. attorney who prosecuted the case insists to us jay stockton would tell us what the federal government has proven in court, that brian wells was involved with the bank robbery. >> no one could have sat through
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this criminal trial without understanding the degree of evidence linking mr. wells to these particular participants. >> in fact, the same affidavit that implicates stockton repeatedly implicates jane heid's brother, the suspects involved saying brian wells knew the plot all along, was involved in the planning, was part of the band of criminal misfits trying to rob a bank. jean heid will never believe that. she believes her government is lying. >> they let an innocent man, my brother, die while in their custody, and they didn't even lift a finger to help him. this case is going to be looked at for years to come. and they don't want it known that they screwed up. brian never would have done this. >> jean heid is still claiming her brother's innocence and
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still says she won't rest until she can prove it. coming up, it's being called the new crack cocaine of crime. thieves stealing your tax refund before you even know it. how do they do it? the special investigation is next. [ woman ] ring. ring. progresso. i just finished a bowl of your new light chicken pot pie soup and it's so rich and creamy... is it really 100 calories? let me put you on webcan... ...lean roasted chicken... and a creamy broth mmm i can still see you. [ male announcer ] progresso. you gotta taste this soup.
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we now return to "cnn presents." >> imagine filing your income taxes only to be told someone
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else has already done the same thing and gotten your refund. >> it's a fraud so big that the irs doesn't even know how much money is getting into the hands of criminals, although law enforcement says it's well into the billions of dollars. >> every taxpayer is at risk. and as our investigation reveals, the criminals have gotten incredibly brazen in spite of an irs crackdown on refund fraud. it's gotten so out of hand, police call this the crack cocaine of crime. >> now, for the first time in our investigation, you'll see the fraud as it unfolds in florida where, in some neighborhoods, refund robbery has become a way of life. >> westbound on 163. >> this is a known gang member. slow down. let him get around us. >> yeah. >> we've just rolled up on what police say is evidence of one of the biggest and easiest frauds in america to pull off.
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a crime hidden on a piece of plastic, a debit card. >> he's got the cards. he just purchased them, it looks like. >> those debit cards, police say, are used to take advantage of fast tax refunds from the irs. the thieves are stealing those refunds by stealing people's identities, filing returns online with phony information and getting the irs to put the refund money on the debit cards. >> see, this is what they're buying. see green dot money cards, target. he went to target and spent 600 bucks. and he paid with a debit card. >> what'd you get? $1,000 for christmas in gift cards? >> police say the man they pulled over, who is already facing identity theft charges in another case, is a known member of the infamous money avenue gang which specializes in this kind of fraud. not surprisingly, he's in no mood to talk. >> i'm just curious what you do for work that you drive such a
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fancy car. >> i don't know about that. >> you don't know nothing about that? can you tell me if you know anything about identity theft happening around here? >> i don't know nothing about it. >> are you involved in any of the tax fraud? >> i don't know nothing about nothing. >> detectives craig and rocky of the north miami beach florida police department will later charge him with buying these gift cards with stolen tax return money. police say here's the same guy on video at target using a debit card in someone else's name with a fraudulent tax refund on it. and police say he used that debit card to buy those gift cards that were on the front seat of the car. >> come on, man! >> he's arrested for marijuana possession, but police later charge him with grand theft in connection with tax refund fraud. he pled guilty to both charges. how easy is it to do this? >> the fraudulent refunds are so easy.
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it's so easy like the federal government putting crack cocaine in candy machines. it's that easy. >> we already have one detective on the scene with an eyeball on the jewelry store. >> you guys show up, you will need help over there. >> a car just pulled up as the target we observed receiving about 23 fraudulent u.s. treasury checks. >> police in north miami beach alone, with just 98 officers patrolling a city of 41,000, have seen over $100 million in tax refund fraud just in the last 2 years alone. it's big money. the criminals cash in those debit cards as quickly as possible, showing off their riches with expensive luxury cars. jaguar, porsche, bmw, mercedes-benz and souped up sports cars with expensive rims. they flaunt fancy watch, diamond pendants worth $55,000 and other jewelry. this one inscribed with the words "money hungry."
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is this all about fast money, fast lifestyle? >> i think it is. the money doesn't mean anything to them because they can make so much of it. >> the fraudsters buy the social security numbers from insiders at hospitals, doctors' offices and even car dealerships, any place where you have to give your personal information. larry gomer, the interim police chief, says as soon as the thieves buy a debit card, they're off and running. >> they register that card in the name of the victim. they already have the victim's name and date of birth and social security number for the return that they are going to file. >> when the tax refund hits the debit card, the identity thieves call it the drop. the criminals then take the drop money to atm machines and grocery stores to get the money off the card as quickly as possible, as these police videos of suspects who were later arrested show. while the debit cards were widely used for fraud, the criminals are so confident they
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won't get caught that at times they even have actual u.s. treasury checks sent to them. in this north miami beach neighborhood where the money avenue gang operates, tax refund fraud has replaced drug dealing. so in the cars you pull over, do you find bricks of drugs? do you find bricks of debit cards? >> debit cards. and the other thing that we find we get lucky on sometimes is the actual ledgers of the names, socials and date of births. >> that they've stolen? >> they've stolen. >> no one is safe. these two detectives among four in the unit who fight this very crime are themselves victims of tax refund fraud. detective denise love got a call just hours before our interview that someone had filed a tax return under her name. >> here we are living a legal life and working a job, you know, and these crooks are rolling around in $100,000 cars and staying in penthouses on miami beach and throwing money at strip clubs and everywhere else. >> with your money?
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>> with my money. >> detective jose marin got this chilling message when he tried to file his return this year. someone else had already done it under his name. >> the thing that really hits us hard is it mostly affects our family. when you start messing with our family, it's something -- you know, you take it to another level. so you get upset. >> marin was counting on more than $9,000. love was expecting $6,100. >> i know from dealing with victims that it's going to be a long time before i see that money. >> coming up, what does the irs say to some officials who charge it's making it too easy for your money to wind up in the hands of criminals? why hasn't the irs stopped that? you know it can be hard to breathe, and how that feels. copd includes chronic bronchitis and emphysema. spiriva helps control my copd symptoms by keeping my airways open for 24 hours. plus, it reduces copd flare-ups.
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so i brought it to mike at meineke. we gave her car a free road handling check. i like free. free is good. my money. my choice. my meineke. it's just another night on the streets in tampa, florida, where police say tax refund fraud is the new crack cocaine for criminals. >> that's over 2,000 in cash. >> this lady doesn't have a job. she's unemployed. >> but inside her suv, it looks like she went on a shopping spree and police find this in her purse. someone else's social security number and an online tax filing website, a red flag for fraud.
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>> you got the information from somebody, their social, e-mail address, dollar amount they're going to put in for with the federal government to get a return on. >> and anyone can learn the crime. this handwritten guide confiscated by police spells out how to get away with it. something this police informant and convicted felon, we'll call cheryl, knows all too well. she says she teaches friends how to do what's known on the street as "the drop," someone else's tax refund dropped on to a fraudster's debit card. >> this is like as soon as they get together, and we're going to meet here and everybody bring their laptops and we will all work together. some people i know gets up at 8:00 in the morning and don't finish until 8:00 at night. >> so it's like a full-time job for them? >> yes. >> but do you think anybody involved in tax refund fraud thinks about the person whose identity they've stolen, whose irs refund they're taking? >> no.
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they're trying to get to the top. they want to be better than the next person. >> the goal? make money as fast as possible. >> fast money, you have to flash it. you have to let others know, hey, i got this. >> even if it means you're going to go to jail? >> yeah. >> and the lure was apparently too much for cheryl. just days after our interview, she was arrested for tax refund fraud. >> the process is broken. >> in tampa alone, where police estimate the fraud approaches a staggering $500,000 in the last two years, police chief jane castor says the irs efforts to curtail it aren't working. >> i don't think i have ever seen this magnitude of fraud that is just wide open. it's wide open. there just doesn't seem to be much being done about it.
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>> she says suspects charged by local police know the penalties are light. unless there are federal charges, which, in most cases, don't happen or take a long time to file. for its part, the irs identified $6.5 billion in tax refund fraud related to identity theft last year. >> i'd like to hear the other side of that equation, too, and an estimation of how much got through. >> that's what we wanted to know. but after weeks of asking, the irs' deputy commissioner, beth tucker, still could not provide an estimate of the fraud that's gone undetected. so just to be clear, you can tell us how much has been caught, but the irs can't say how much of this fraudulent money has ended up in criminals' hands? >> we process 140 million tax returns at irs on a given year. the greatest majority of our taxpayers file a legitimate tax return.
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so do some of these fraudsters, perpetrators actually get a tax-free refund illegally? unfortunately, yes. but for the actual size of the problem, we'd probably need to get back to you with a number. >> we're still waiting on that number. typical, says tampa mayor, bob buckhorn, who is furious with the irs. has the irs disappointed you and your city? >> i don't know. i haven't seen them. as far as i'm concerned, they're missing in action. they have not been helpful. they have not been a player. they have not taken responsibility for their side of the enforcement. if anything, you know, we've been banging our heads against their door asking for help and getting nothing in response. the silence has been deafening. >> is the irs missing in action in tampa? what's your response? >> no. the irs is not. in fact, we have significantly increased the amount of resources we've devoted to identity theft, which is a heinous crime.
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>> just one week after our interview, the irs sent a team to meet with tampa and north miami beach police officials. law enforcement tells us there's a simple solution to curbing much of the fraud. don't allow the refunds to be put on debit cards. why hasn't the irs stopped that? >> not every taxpayer has a bank account. and so, the debit cards that are issued by a third-party provider are a legitimate way for taxpayers to get their refund. >> the irs does not verify information entered on the return before issuing the refund. how much of this has to do with a speedy return? i know you want to get the return to the taxpayers as early as possible. is that part of the problem? >> the balancing act is something that we're constantly aware of. i mean, the american taxpayer that's worked hard all yearlong
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and is depending on that legitimate refund, they have a right to get that refund from irs as quickly as possible. >> and the fraudsters, they know time is on their side. the faster the irs sends out the returns, the sooner they get some hard working taxpayer's cash. >> it's an underground epidemic. it has taken the place of street level drug dealing. >> are these your cards? >> it is a very, very scary proposition. >> the treasury inspector general says it can take victims of fraud more than a year to resolve their cases. according to police, this problem is only getting bigger, as more criminals learn just how easy it is to pull off. police also say they've been told that even high school students are doing the fraudulent returns. up next, the mysterious disappearance of two men in florida last seen in the hands of a law enforcement officer. of a law enforcement officer. we investigate. [ male announcer ] black friday will never be the same.
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whatever role race may or may not play in the trayvon martin case, recent history in sanford, florida, and elsewhere gives many in the african-american community
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reason to suspect and, in some cases, fear the police. on his blog, the film director tyler perry describes an intense traffic stop he had with police in atlanta. he's also calling attention to the disappearance in florida of two men whose last known encounter was with a now-fired sheriff's deputy. my investigation into the missing men. marcia williams hasn't seen her son in more than eight years. do you have any hope your son is still alive? >> i don't believe that terrance is alive. at this point, i have to find out what happened to him. >> what happened to terrance williams is anybody's guess. he was last seen outside this naples, florida, cemetery on january 11th, 2004, with this man, sheriff's deputy, steve calkins. investigators say calkins' story about meeting terrance williams at the cemetery doesn't add up. at one point, calkins said he
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pulled williams' car over because it was having problems. when he called his friend in dispatch, he reported the car had been abandoned. he never let on he'd had any contact with the driver, terrance williams. >> i got a homey cadillac on the side of the road here signal 11, signal 52, nobody around. >> maybe he's out there in the cemetery, and he'll come back and his car will be gone! >> but if the driver was not around, how then was deputy calkins able to run a background check using terrance's name and birth date? >> last name? >> williams. common spelling. >> date of birth? >> 4-1-75. black male. >> yet, just four days later, caulk calkins claims to remember nothing of the car or driver. listen to what he says when a sheriff's dispatcher calls him at home. >> you towed a car from vanderbilt and 111th monday, a cadillac. do you remember it? >> no.
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>> do you remember, you said it was near the cemetery. >> cemetery. >> the people at the cemetery are telling her you put somebody in the back of your vehicle and arrested them. i don't show you arresting anybody. >> i never arrested nobody. >> isn't that amazing? he's a seasoned veteran, and he couldn't remember four days later? >> so you don't buy that? >> no, it's not true. it's not true at all. >> eight days after terrance vanished, deputy calkins was ordered to write a report. and it's in this report that a different story emerges. deputy calkins said he drove the father of four to this nearby circle k where he says he thought terrance worked and it was that version that concerned investigators because months earlier, they heard the same story from deputy calkins about another missing man. 24-year-old felipe santos vanished october 14th, 2003, after deputy calkins responded to the scene of a minor accident
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involving santos. he issued santos a citation an put him in the back of his sheriff's car. santos' brother who was also at the scene asked we hide his face out of fear for his own safety. did deputy calkins tell us where he was taking your brother? >> translator: the officer never told us anything. later we went to the jail and my brother wasn't there. >> when calkins was questioned about felipe santos, an undocumented worker he said he dropped him off at a circle k. sheriff's investigator kevin o'neill. >> we had nobody corroborating they saw williams or santos at one of these circle ks. that's strictly calkins' testimony. i think we can add up where we can put his testimony at this point. >> o'neill says neither of the missing men were ever seen on circle k's security cameras. there's more.
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about a month after terrance williams disappeared, severe calkins gave a sworn statement during an investigation. he told investigators he called this circle k where he dropped terrance williams off and said he made that call from his work issued nextel phone. when investigators say they'd pulled his phone records and told him there was no record of a call to this circle k from his cell phone, he brushed it off, saying simply, quote, i don't know what to tell you. you've been doing this for a long time. you know when something doesn't smell right. do you think that de calki had anything to do with the disappearance and possible death of these two men? >> he's absolutely in the middle of the investigation and everything i turn to brings me right back to steve calkins. >> months after santos and williams went missing, deputy calkins, a 16-year veteran, was fired for lying in connection with the investigation for terrance williams. calkins hasn't been charged with
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a crime because no criminal evidence was ever found linking calkins to the disappearances. in the case of terrance williams, investigators say the deputy's car was searched and described as immaculate. calkins home was never searched because, according to investigators, they didn't have the evidence needed for a search warrant. we wanted to ask steve calkins some questions but couldn't get past this woman. snl. >> yes. >> hi. sorry to bother you. i'm randi kaye with cnn. >> no. you can get the camera out of our property please. >> he's not on your property. >> bye. >> is he here? >> bye. >> in 2006, calkins did tell a local paper he didn't do anything wrong, blaming the coincidences of the missing men on very bad luck. he suggested maybe they ran way. >> if terrance was alive, terrance would have had somebody to contact his mother.

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